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Gastvortrag von Ilya Vinitsky (Princeton)

The Absolute Faker: Ivan Narodny and Cultural Value of Mystifications and Mystifiers

06.11.2019 16:00 Uhr – 18:00 Uhr

Das Institut für Slavische Philologie lädt ein zum

Gastvortrag von Ilya Vinitsky (Princeton)

The Absolute Faker: Ivan Narodny and Cultural Value of Mystifications and Mystifiers

WANN: Mittwoch, 06.11.2019, 16:00 bis 18:00 Uhr
WO: LMU, Hauptgebäude, Raum E 318

The lecture introduces Vinitsky's research project on the cultural biography and political imagination of Ivan Narodny (1869-1953), a Russian-Estonian-Finnish-German-American "revolutionist," arms dealer, journalist, writer, art critic and promoter (https://www.gf.org/fellows/all-fellows/ilya-vinitsky/). The "founder" of the "United States of Russia" and the author of its Declaration of Independence, he was also the creator of numerous heretofore unidentified literary frauds and mystifications, including the legend of Shamballa, which spread all over the world via the Hearst newspaper agency that employed him. This lecture aims to introduce an interdisciplinary methodology for analyzing the phenomenon exemplified by this mystification and its creator and, eventually, to lay the foundation for a historical (sub)discipline dealing with the formation and cultural values of liars, forgers, and mystifiers.

About the Presenter: Ilya Vinitsky is Professor of Russian literature in the Slavic Department at Princeton University. His main fields of expertise are Russian Romanticism and Realism, the history of emotions, and nineteenth- century intellectual and spiritual history. His books include Vasily Zhukovsky's Romanticism and the Emotional History of Russia (Northwestern University Press, 2015), Ghostly Paradoxes: Modern Spiritualism and Russian Culture in the Age of Realism (Toronto University Press, 2009; Choice Magazine's list of Outstanding Academic Titles for 2010) and A Cultural History of Russian Literature, co-written with Andrew Baruch Wachtel (Polity Press, 2009). He also co-edited Madness and the Mad in Russian Culture (University of Toronto Press, 2007) and published a chapter on the history of madness in literature and art in the recent Routledge History of Madness & Mental Health. His most personal book, The Count of Sardinia: Dmitry Khvostov and Russian Culture (New Literary Observer, 2017; in Russian) investigates the phenomenon of anti-poetry in Russian literary tradition from the 18th through the 21st century and focuses on the literary biography and cultural function of the king of Russian bad poets, Count Dmitry Khvostov. This book received a 2018 Marc Raeff's Book Prize of the Eighteenth-Century Russian Studies Association.

Der Vortrag findet im Rahmen des Forschungskolloquiums von Dr. Anja Burghardt statt.

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